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DAILY ENQUIRER - SUN: COLUMBUS GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 1, 1886.
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Civil. KldllTS 1*0 NOT WORK WELL.
The njeution of colored people from
white peoph?'rt coaches appoarn to he epi-
leinir jiii't now. The ilonire of nonroei-
to enforce the mi natural idea—not law—
of civil rights appeal’.- to he epidemic
just now. Pcrlmpa the latter accounts
for the former, l.u-t week a negro achool
The BNQUIHER4SUN i« liwucd every day, ux j,. H( .|, er 0 f Tuakegco started to Macon
eept Monday. Wie Weekly hi 1h«u«1 on Monday- ” to lnrtnv H w |fc» accompanied hv two
The Dally (Including Sunday) la delivered by
center* in the city or malted, piwtogc (Tee, to sub- i colored companions as groomsmen,
eertbem for 7.V. per month, S’.MMl for three Now, this hl’idegioolu deserved credit—
<C«lwidiua<Euqu irrr^un.
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD.
Daily, Weekly and Sunday.
!
T
i rr
<
i
j
months, ft.Ill) for si* months, or #7.011 a year.
The Sunday is delivered by carrier boys in the
ally or mailed to subscribers, postage free, at
81.04 a year.
The Weekly Is issued on Monday, and is mailed
to subscribers’, postage free, at s 1.1II a year.
Transient advertisements will lie taken for the
Dally at fl per square of 10 lines or less for the , . . , , , ,
flrst Insertion, and 50cents for each subsequent | doilht, intended to show her W hilt ftn ilil-
1 usertfon, and for the Weekly at fl for each !n-
he was on route to become a principal
actor in a lawful marriage. Brown would
have ncipiitted himself with credit
had he not decided to show his bride that a
colored Alabama “professor” was as big
a man us uny body in America. He, no
Merit is the Trade Mark
A.ZLTID
TEST OF
of Success,
•ertion.
Ail communications intended to promote the
private emlB or Interests of corporations, societies
or individuals wilt be charged as advertisements.
Special contracts made for advertising by tile
year. Obituaries will be charged for at customary
r ates.
None but solid metal culs used.
Alt communications should be addressed to the
Enquirer-Sun.
A pretty tough story comes from Mex
ico relative to our special envoy. From
reports be lias been on a “high horse,"
so much so that if Secretary Bavnrd finds
it true, upon investigation, bo will invite
him to come down.
hr is sincerely to be hoped that some
time during (lie present decade the world
will know all about the battle of Gettys
burg, by whom it was fought, and who of
the many claimants for the honor was
the man who struck tile blow that de
cided the conflict.
Tub sea-serpent lias been seen oil’Capo
Ann, way up in Massachusetts. This one
hail four tins or horns, and was making
t wenty miles an hour through the briny.
The captain who saw it must have had
an all night executive session with a but
tle of “fish bait.”
Last year the richest American mer
chant, M. B. Chitlin: the richest American
railroad man. W. It. Vanderbilt, and the
richest American planter, Kdmund liicli-
ardson, died. It lias been suggested as
notable that all these men died with
their boots on. One dropped dead a, his
desk, another in his hull, and the other
in the street,
piioiiiiiitiomsts in iivink.
There is no doubt about it that the
prohibitionists of Maine arc making it
hot for the republicans in the state elec
tion. They arc not unaware of the situ
ation and are becoming much alarmed,
as they have good reason to he. Neal
How, who was the leading spirit in the
inauguration of the Maine prohibition
laws as it relates to teetotalers, and who
Is now the gubernatorial candidate tinder
tha, party wing, tells them: “1 shall
never again vote the republican ticket, no
matter who is nominated. We are going
to kill the republican party and form a
new one. Wo prohibitionists have re
solved to leave the republican party, just
as we left the whig party on account of
ajuv anti-slavery ideas. The whig party i j ( ’"
was always promising to keep up with
••us, hut never performing. The repub
lican party in this state is closely allied
with the ruin power.”
There is no doubt that the republicans
are much alarmed, as they are forced to
recognize that the eloquence and blunt
facts of Neal 1 low and St. John over
balance the oratorical powers of the
Plumed Knight, whom they have per
suaded to throw himself into the breach.
The break in the ranks of the republican
party is compared to a crevasse in a lower
Alissi—ippi river. People in the Missis
sippi valley are prepared, from this
parisoit, how dangeroiu
__ _ . _ the prohibi- {
lionists to the success of republicans in But they will brook no opposition
.Maine.
I,'EASE OK THE MOHII.E AN I* Mil !111).
We congratulate the stockholders and
*11 others interested in the successful
running of the Mobile and Girard rail
road that the lease of that road to the
Central railroad, heretofore contemplated,
was on yesterday successfully and sutis-
lactori 1 y eonsuimitated.
The committee of intelligent gentle
men in whose charge the matter had
been left, met yesterday in Savannah,
and, after looking the matter over in all
its aspects and duly considering every
interest of the road, both for the present
tunl the future, leased it to the Central
fortlie term of ninety-nine years at the
rate u. one and one-half per cent, on the
capital stock.
The Mobile and Girard for several
years past has been operated by the Oen- I the
tral road, and under its management ! not.
the business has increased, the j must
comfort and safety of the traveling
public much improved, and the general
condition of the road greatlv bettered.
mouse man she had married. When the
poor, weeping bride left him half way
home as a prisoner in a rural police
court she must have come to the conclu
sion—mournful but compelled—that lie
wasn’t a “bigger man than old
Grunt" after all—she realizing’that she
is t lie wife of a negro, not a white man.
II may he asked, is there any social dif
ference in rights and privileges. We ask,
what do recent events disclose?
But all the coses of this epidemic of
ejection have not yet been reported.
Here is the latest: Oil the night of
August 27, one Dora Duvall, colored,
hoarded a passenger train hound from
Greensboro to Selma, on the
Western railroad of Alabama.
Dora was a colored woman—is yet,
wlmt there is left of her—extremely col
ored. In fact 1>ora runs this colored busi
ness into the ground, inasmuch as she
makes it the cause of her contention.
Now, as the average orthodox church has
pews for every sort and summary of peo
ple, pews in which both the ungodly and
the sinner may appear, so it was, with
this Western Atlantic train. In fact
Dora is sort of a rustler whore she lives
anyhow, and at two or three other places.
The “hinting” process ns ii related to Dora
consisted in “hinting” the rusty resonant
and redoubtable Dora from tiie elect
company of the white Indies, where she
introduced herself, into another and
suitable ear. Dora resisted, but she got
out all Hie same.
To lie plain and historic, Dora was
quietly taken from the Indies’ ear to her
own ; just as site would have been taken
from a ladies’ boudoir to a servant’s room.
“Simply that, and nothing more.” But
when the news of the outrage (?) against
“Dora Duvall, of Greensboro,” reached
Selma, on Saturday, the authorities of the
A. M. E. church decided to have a sort of
politico-religious revelry, and shake its
fist in the face of the Uuited States gov
ernment.
Well, on Saturday, the A. M. E. church
in Selma-met and resolved. What didn’t
they resolve? It would tako too much
time to tell now ; but according to the
speeches made by Messrs. Blobins, Stone
and Sullivan, Mexico and Canada are no
more now than a stutter in a storm.
1 n all seriousness, it all amounts to
this. White men must rule America. It
t law of ethnology that there can be
dominant race in the same
country at the same time.
We. know wlmt we say. For
seven hundred years the Anglo-Saxon
race lias been marching from its primal
roughness to it< polishing “after the
similitude of a palace;” from its un-
Christ-like heathenism to its possession
of the “uttermost parts of the earth." It
is taking the, world. Kamskutehigiin
and Indian, Hottentot and Hindoo
look to it ns the rising star. Anglo-
Saxons. are the Romans of the wnil l’s
renaissance. They are supreme.
They are just, merciful and protective.
It is
Thksi: Is one feature in the Tcxas-Mexlcnn
squabble which appears to have been lost liqlit
■ of, and which may account for considerable of
the Ill-feeling existing on the frontier. It la
just this: That for years past the Texan border
has been the scene of wholesale smuggling, |
ohlelly Into Mexico. Two new railways—the
Mexican National and the M xicatl Central
connecting the entire southern railroad ays*
teni of the United States with tile Interior of
Mexico, have gone fnr to break up tills busi
ness, and the lawless borderers on both sides j
are thrown on their o\yn resources. The rev- .
enues of Mexico can be hcncclorth easily col
lected at two points, Laredo and K1 Paso, while j
cheap freight will furnish the most formidable
competitor to the smuggling industry. It
1 follows quite naturally that the budden release
of many hundreds of men from one illegal avo
cation tends to precipitate them into another,
even If that new avocation be cutting one an- *
I other’s throats.
Tim men who believe that the only ‘good
Indian is a dead Indian may be gratified to learn
that the secretary of the Interior has approved
the plans Ufa new railroad tnrongivue portion Upward and Onward, Each Day Adds New Laurels to the Already
of the ludian territory adjoining the stn,te of 1 . .
Kansas, with prospect* of a reduction of the In- j
dinn reservations in that quarter. A reduction ;
—THE—
QUALITf THE TRUE
of 12,000 square miles in the great Hioux reserve- I
'tion in Dakota is also spoken of. Slowly but j
surely the red man is being crowded to the wall
of extinction. It will all be over in 100 years—or
less.
A Japanese gentleman, who heard the
“Mikado” sung in Harrisburg recently, says that
the song which is sung in the second act on the j
arrival of the Mikado, id a real Japanese song |
which was very popular during the great revolu- 1
tion of 1866. A Japanese would fee punished for j
singing it now. Home of those Americans who !
are singing at the whole opera ought to be sent i
out to Japan on a venture. They never would be J
missed.
Something slower than the average messenger
boy has been discovered. Niagara Falls are re
ceding at the rate of 2.4 feet per year, at which
rate it will take them 2300 years to iro a mile.
Somebody suggests that the proper thing to
put on the stamps which must be affixed to pack
ages of oleomargarine is a stalled goat. It’s
bogus butter, don’t you know.
The Albany Express (rep.) remarks that “the
thought is constantly suggested throughout Mr.
Blaine’s speech that the republican party .is on
the defensive.”
Senator Frye does not thiuk that the cold
water of the proh ibitionists will remove that “lit
tle smirch on the skirt of Mr. Blaine’s coat.”
No
We
Enviable Reputation of Columbus’s Favorites.
Dull Days at Gray’s!
ALWAYS CROWDED.
Came. We Saw,
We Conquered:
Confidential, but tell all your neighbors about it—that Gray this week will have the |
greatest bargains of the age.' We must make room for our New Fall Stock, which in
on the way now. There is blood on the moon, so competitors look out. Note the un
heard-of prices and come early.
Double Width Du DAISON BLACK CASHMERE, worth 35c, price now 15c.
Double Width Lupin’s Extra Wide BLACK CASHMERE, worth 55c, price now 25c.
Double Width VERMDALSEY IMPORTED MOHAIRS, worth 50c, price now 23c.
Double Width TORTER-SHELL CLOTH, fancy, ail wool, worth 85c, price now 50c. 1
All our DRESS GOODS on our 12ic Bargain Counter, pick at 10c.
-1-4 1800 Fine Best PACIFIC COLORED LAWNS, worth 12Jc, at5c.
Two new oases Best FANCY COLORED LAWNS, worth 6|c, at 2.1c.
40-Inch WHITE LAWNS, worth 26c, at 8c.
Splendid MONAHALK GINGHAMS, worth 10c, at 41c.
A now line of FRENCH GUIPURE LACE CURTAILS, worth *4 50, at |2 25.
Wc claim the best BLEACHED DOMESTIC in the city. It is registered in Eng
land worth 12jc ; during this sale price will be 8c.; 4-4 full; see it.
All full size MOSQUITO NETS will be 38 cents a piece. 1
Best FALL PRINTS only 4.1 cents: also good BLEACHING at 4 cents. .
Ask to sec our TOWELS, LINEN DAMASK and BED SPREADS.
All our FLANNELS are now in. See our prices; ’twill pay you; also how we
price All Wool BLANKETS at this season of the year.
Finns UstolGILIis,
To the Cuticura Remedies I Owe
My Health, My Happiness
and , My Life.
A day never passes that I do not think and
speak kindly of the Cutictjra Remedies. Seven
years ago all ol' a. dozen lumps formed on my
neck, ranging in size from a cherry stone to an
orange. The large ones were friglitlUl to look at,
and painftil to bear; people turned aside when
treatment and all medicines failed to do any
good. In a moment of despair I tried the Cuti
cura Remedies -Cuticura, the great Skin Cure,
and Cuticura Soap, an exquisite Skin
Beautifier, externally, and Cuticura
Resolvent, the new Blood Puri
fier, internally; the small lumps (as I call them)
gradually "*
IHY-
The overwhelming argument in favor of the cash system is that it insures success; but there is
another even of weightier consideration, that it lengthens the career and doubles the chances and
years of business life, anihilating the exacting and exasperating annoyance that weai and tear with
I merciless severity until the big well stops. To the merchant driven to absolute desperation by the
; miseries and agonies of the twin barbarians, the “Credit and Debit Ledgers,” oblivion or even death
i itself is a welcome messenger. New aspirants for fame and wealth under tne curse of credit rarely
j survive but few years of the terror and intense mental si rain of the two infernal inevitables—how to
i buy cheap and how to sell cheap. There is no pity mixed up with the inexorable demands of neces
sity. Self respect, lofty ambition, ability, peace and opportunity are swept down into one common
rum, aild sympathy and sentiment are utter strangers at the final scene. ’Twill be too Jate then to
say, “If we only had done like GRAY—sell them low for spot cash, make quick sales and small
profits, ’twould be better for us now, instead of drawing down the great curtain of oblivion ovet the
bitter, irremediable, irreclaimable past.”
in
of matter, leaving two slight scars in my. neOt to
day to tell the story of my suffering. My weight
then was one hundred and fifteen sickly pounds;
my weight now is one hundred and sixty-one
solid, healthy pounds, and my height is only five
feet five inches. In my travels 1 praised the Cu
ticura Remedies, North, South, East and West.
To Cuticura Remedies I owe my health, my
happiness and my life. A prominent New York
druggist asked me the other day, “Do you still
use tne Cuticura Remedies ; you look to be in
perfect health.” My reply was, "I do, and shall
always. I have never known what sickness is
since 1 commenced using the Cuticura Reme
dies.” Sometimes I am laughed at by praising
them to people not acquainted with their merits,
but sooner or later they will come to their senses
! and believe the same as those that use them, ns
I dozens have whom I have told. May the time
i come when there shall be a large Cuticuha Sup-
i ply House in every city in the world, for the bon-
! efit of humanity, where the CvTict UA Remedies
shall be sold only, so that there will be rarely a
: need of ever entering a drug store.
M. HUSBANDS,
210 Fulton St.. New York.
Cuticuva Remedies are a positive cure for every
i form of Skin and Blood Diseases, from Pimples to
, Seroftila. Sold everywhere. Price.: Cuticuva, 50
I cts.; Soap, 25 cts.: Resolvent. Si. Prepared by the
Potter Drug and Chemical Co.. Boston. Mass.
8»en<l for ••How to ( tire Skin Diseirten.**
It is our proud boast that we always fhlfill our pledges. We shall not deviate from this rule.
Therefore, genuine bargains may be expected. We mean what we say, and say what we mean.
What we always think of—sell them high, they pass you by.
Respectfully submitted by the Crushers of High Prices.
The largest business connections South—Columbus, Savannah, Augusta, New York.
OIISr-TOIP-LrVIE-IHIOTTSIE,
C. P. CRAY & CO.,
Opposite Rankin House.
Baby Humors, use Cuticura Soap.
7%
KIDNEY PAINS, STRAINS. BACK- 1
ACHE. Weakness and Weariness •
earned by overwork, dissipation, stand
ing, walking, or the sewing machine, i
cured by the Cuticura Anti-Pain j
Plaltek. New, elegant, original and i
infallible. 25c. se wed&w |
The Brown Cotton Gin Co.,
NEW LONDON, CONN.
Manufacturers of the “Old Reliable”
Brown Cotton Gins, Feeders and Con
densers.
All the very latest improvements: im
proved roll box, patent whippet’, two
brush belts, extra strong brush, cast
steel bearing 0 Improved Feeder,
cnlarv ’ ..•.st ore ’oudcnecr.
. j. ofi.simV’" .instruction, durable
ogin ■ •' ..,e light, cleans the seed per
Ifect., and produces first class samples.
I DELIVERED FREE OF FREIGHT
at any accessible point. Mend lor full
description and price list.
COLUMBUS IRON WORKS, Agents, Columbus, Ga.
Rat&wftm
When taken charge of hy the Central its
prospects were gloomy indeed, and grow
ing worse—with receipts barely sutlieiont
to cover running expenses, and nothing
to meet the accruing interest on its bonds,
or to make the much-needed repairs and
improvements. Now the road-bed is in
first-class condition, with many improve
ments added in the wav of new depot
buildings and warehouses, with a com
plete and ample supply of rolling stock.
Of course with the more permanent
and lengthened interest which this lease
gives in the road to the Central, we may
expect, if possible, a more liberal policy
to be exercised than has evfcn heretofore
obtained, and those adjacent to the road
to enjoy even greater facilities in the
way of freight and travel. In behalf of
the stockholders and the traveling pub
lic, we return to the gentlemen of the
committee our thanks for the efficient
manner in which they have performed
their task.
better for a black man that he hud never
bee nborn than that he get in the way of
the juggernaut of the Anglo-Saxon race.
Their women they prize above rubies;
and the sons and daughters of a darker
race cannot tomb them save as servants.
From its ineipieney the Anglo-Saxon
race lias never submitted to anything
but Divinity. It never will. They can
be killed, but not conquered. Mongol,
Slavonic, Indian and Esquimaux have
paled before the Anglo-Saxon’s appear
ance. And now in a country con
taining forty-two millions of Anglo-
Saxons and eight millions of negroes, the
latter poor, ignorant and recently eman
cipated, does it stand to reason that the
loss shall lend the greater? that the in
ferior shall oppress the superior ? that the j
millions shall intimidate
forty-two millions? It does I
We repent it; white men -
rule America. The sooner some 1
colored men learn this the better. The
later the worse. It is useless for negroes
like’ those of the A. M. E. church in
REPORTOFTHE CONDITION
-OF THE—
M other’s for Rent.
Friend
the State of Georgia,
THE CLOSE OF BUSINES
AVGUST 27tu. 1S8H.
oijrht
RESOURCES.
Loans anil discounts $288,021 97
Overdrafts 9,722 18
V. S. Bonds to secure circulation 100,000 00 .
Other stocks, bonds and mortgages 18,700 00
Due from approved reserve agents 13.252 55 !
Due from other National Bank* 2,686 34 i
Due from State Banks and bankers *24 54
Real estate, ftirnitureand fixtures 7,865 89
Current expenses and taxes paid. 1.881 01 •
Checks ana other cash items 1,652 07 i
Bills of other Banks 1,865 00
Fractional paper currency, nickels and j
pennies 80 00 j
Specie 34,725 65
Legal-tender notes 8,000 00
Redemption fttnd with U. S. Treasurer
i5 per cent, of circulation*
ly diminishes the danger to
life of both mother ana child
and leaves the mother in a
condition highly favorable
to speedy recovery, and far
less liable to flooding. Con
vulsions, and other alarming
symptoms incident to slow
or puinftil labor. Its wonder
ful efficacy in this respect
entitles it to be called The
Mother’s Friend and to be
ranked as one of the life
saving remedies of the nine
teenth century.
We cannot publish certifi
cates concerning this reme
dy without wounding the
delicacy of the writers. Yet
we have hundreds on tile.
Send for our book, “To Mothers,” mailed free.
Bradfield Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga.
jy21 eod&w nrm (2f
Total..
4.500 00
$493,477 80
Selma, on Saturday night, to talk about
having what they wanted, or death.
Death is easily dealt where it i> deserved.
The strange thing is, why should people
he willing to give their lives to get into
associations where their presence V ob
noxious. These negroes assert that thev
LIABILITIES.
Capital stock paid in
National Bank notes outstanding
Individual deposits subject to cheek .
Demand cert incats of deposit
Due to other National Banks
Due to state Banks and bankers
Total
STATE OF GEORGIA, )
County of Muscogee, i ""
I. Geo. W. Dillingham. Cashier of the above-
. . named bank, do solemnly swear that the above
Will get into white peoples company, I Statement is true, to the best of my knowledge
"here they are not wanted,-*or die. j #nd behef * geo. w. Dillingham,
i Members of anv other rave would risk . . . Sjshier.
... • . Subscribed and sworn to before me this 30th day
their lives to got out of company m 0 f August, i$$6.
which they are not wanted. j Notary Public Muscogee county, Ga.
Be preferences as they may, the wo- j Correct—Attest;
men of the white race in their traveling
A, & IVUOLLEGE,
100.000 00
2MS8M Alabama Polytechrn’cal Institute.
90.000 00 | J
218,130 70 I
8,827 85 !
4.116 37 rpHE next session of this College will open Sep-
043 9b ; l tember 15th. Three couises ©f education are
offered:
I. Chemistry and Agriculture.
II. Mechanics and Engineering.
III. General course, including Latin, French
and German.
Laboratory Instruction constitutes an impor
tant feature and is given, in: 1. Chemistry;
Physics; 3. Engineering and Surveying
. .$493,477 80 j
4. Agriculture* 5. Natural History: ti. Drawing:
7. Mechanic Arts, and 8. Printing and Telegraphy.
The Mechanic Art Laboratory will be enlarged
and two new departments added.
Tuition is free. For catalogues address
\VM LEROY BROUN, President.
aug31 eodt oelO Auburn; Ala.
1
coaches, as in their dwellings, in the fu
ture as in the past, will be protected in
their race exclusiveness. This is nature,
not mere legislation. This is a principle,
not a prejudice. And times change and
men often etiange with them, but princi
ples never.
augl It
G. M. WILLIAMS,
J. S. GARRETT. V Directors.
J. RHODES BROWNE. )
FOR SALE,
fl’HE VERY DESIRABLE FIVE (5) ROOM
L residence of W. A. Redd on Jackson street.
One-half (ftp acre. Terms most liberal. Apply at
once to
SOULE REDD,
aepldlm Broker.
N EW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY
0F MUSIC Boston, Mass,
THE LARGEST end BEST EQUIPPED lithe
WORLD —100 Instructors. 2005 Students last year. Thor
ough Instruction in Vocsland Instrumental Music, Pisnosnd
Organ Tumor, Fine Arts, Oratory, Literature. French, Ger- ,
* Italian Languages, English Branches, Gymnastic^ |
•oagrtfdfcB weowtt
$30 00. The Gaboury Residence, Rose Hill.
20 00. The Dessau Dwelling and Store, Rose
Hill.
16 75. New four-room Dwelling, Rose Hill.
37 50. The Jordan Brick Dwelling, north Jack-
son street.
32 00. Mr. Geo. Glenn’s new two-etory Dwell
ing. north Jackson street.
15 00. Four-room Dwelling north Troup street.
20 00. New two-story Dwelling on Troup
street, hall square north cf Grier’s store.
10 00. Barber Shop opposite post office, occu
pied by Sandy Alexander.
18 75. Store on Broad street north of Epping
House.
L. H. CHAPPELL,
Broker, Real Estate anil Insurance Agent.
dtf
'running of trains.
Arrival anti Ihjtarlnrc of All Train*
at (’oliinibii* Carrying PattNiMigors-
In Filed .Inly IN. 1886
ARRIVALS.
COLUMBUS AND ROME RAILWAY.
Mail train from Greenville 10:11 a. ra.
Accommodation from Greenville 7:07 p. n».
SOUTHWESTERN RAILROAD.
Mail train from Macon 2:25 p. m.
Accommodation from Macon 2:43 a.m.
COLUMBUS AND WESTERN RAILWAY.
Mail train from Montgomery 11:55 a. m
Muil train from Atlanta 6:31 p. m
MOBILE AND GIRARD RAILROAD.
Mjul train from Troy and Eufaula 9:55 a. m
Accommodation from Troy, Eufaula
and Montgomery 2:02 p. m
Accommodation from Union Springs... 10:48 p. m
DEPARTURES.
COLUMBUS AND ROME RAILWAY.
Mail train for Greenville 3:00 p. m
Accommodation for Greenville * 7:00 a. m
SOUTHWESTERN RAILROAD.
Mail train for Macon... 12:00 m
Accommodation for Macon 11:45 p. m
COLUMBUS AND WESTERN RAILWAY.
Mail train for Atlanta 8:54 a. m
Mail train for Montgomery 2:28 p. m
MOBTLE AND GIRARD RAILROAD.
Mail train for Troy 2:80 p. m.
Accommodation for Troy and Eufaula.. 4:55 a. m
Accommodation for Union Springs and
Montgomery 5:45 pm
Send six cent* for postage and
recceive free a costly dox of
„ :h will help all, of either sex, to make
more money right away than anything else in
this world. Fortunes await the workers abso
lutely sure. TemuS mailed, fret. Tbus A Go*
d*wtf
CINCINNATI
ENQUIRER
FOB 1887.
DAILY and WEEKLY
THE NEWSIEST,
MOST FEARLESS,
MOST POPULAR,
ABLEST EDITED
Newspaper in America.
For inside information of schemes, publlo,
corporate, prtvato or other kind, you will be
obliged to read THE ENQUIRER.
As to political and^social intelligence,
TRUTH AND FACTS,
One is sadly ignorant who fails to consult that
greatest of all newspapers,
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WEEKLY ENQUIRER.
One Year, $l 15. Six Months, 65c.
A Free Copy for Clubs of Five.
DAILY ENQUIRER.
1 Mo. 3 Mos. 6 Mos. 1 Yr.
Sunday and Dally SI 50 S3 75 S7 00 S14 00
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Address BMQTTXXIBn,
CINCINNATI, OHia
JOHN R. McLEAN,
Publisher and Proprietor.
WAI EH IB MEAL
Ground daily, and fresh all the time
At $1.15 Per Sack, CASH.
O NE OR aMORE SACKS, as wanted. These
prices will hold good unless some fluctua
tions in markets or the Merchants and Brokers*
Association forces the mills to reftise to sell me
Where I ftirnish the facks 2L^c per bushel extra
will be charged for the sack.
Pride of the Kitchen
SOAP.
FOR ALL
House Cleaning Purposes.
.4 Solid 12-ox. Coke for Sc.
J. J. WOOD,
138 Broad Street.
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UNPRECEDENTED
STOCK OUT
Piece Goods
NOW READY
For Fall, 1886.
Clothing Mode to Order.
tii{»j« rallclcd.
’rice* Reasonable.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
GOODS selected now will be made ready for
delivery at any date desired. Call and favor us
with an order.
G. J. PEACOCK,
Clothing; Jlnniifnvtiirer, 130ft A 1203
Brom Ntreet. ColnmbiiN tin.
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ACTIVE AGENTS ^WANTED
mJjut to rood worker*. Addrea* Haitafeld Port*
j.